Press resources speculate that he may be headed to a friendly country. Russia, Zimbabwe, and Venezuela are mentioned. Richard Spencer of The Telegraph reported that “the main possibility of exile outside the Arab world is in Venezuela, whose leader Hugo Chavez is an old friend. Last week a Venezuelan envoy was in the Tunisian resort island of Djerba, talking to Qadhafi representatives.”

Throughout Libya’s civil war, Chavez has steadfastly aligned with the Libyan leader. Never once did he call for new leadership in Libya or even urge Qadhafi to spare the lives of his own people.

On August 1, Chavez remained adamant. “I respect him a lot! He’s resisting there. Long live Libya!” Chavez denounced the National Transition Council as “a group of terrorists.” “Live and be victorious,” urged Chavez. “We’re with you.”

On August 13, Chavez dispatched a letter of support to his “brother” Qadhafi.

The Libyan leader’s fall will deal a double blow to Chavez. It is another setback for the extreme anti-Western, anti-U.S. ideology that has increasingly become the touchstone of Chavez’s Bolivarian Revolution and international alliance structure. Once more, Chavez puts himself on the wrong side of history.

With Syrian ally President Bashar al-Assad—whom Chavez defended as “a humanist” and victim “of a fascist onslaught—under siege and swiftly losing legitimacy, Chavez could soon be bereft of the companionship of another radical Arab soul-mate.

That would leave revolutionary Iran as Chavez’s firmest and sole remaining ally in the Middle East.

To emphasize the point, the U.S. State Department’s new 2010 Country Reports on Terrorism judged that Venezuela fails to assist in the fight against international terrorism and warned that “President Chavez has continued to strengthen Venezuela’s relationship with state sponsor of terrorism Iran.”

Chavez’s foreign ministry and pro-Chavez media employed highly undiplomatic language in denouncing the Obama Administration and its latest terrorism report, accusing it of playing the role of “planetary judge,” engaging “in massacres of civilians on numerous war fronts,” and opposing any nation “that does not yield to its imperial intentions for world domination.”

A slippage in oil prices is also unwelcome news for Chavez. With his economy on the ropes and elections ahead next year, a decline in revenue for an economy that depends on petroleum exports by his national oil company for 90 percent of its foreign earnings is a grim prospect.

Since the start of the Libyan crisis last March, Chavez has made clear where his support and moral sentiments lie. Celebrations in the streets of Tripoli marking the impending fall of a tyrant are once more a warning sign of what lies ahead for despots: Arab, African, Asian, or Latin American. It is a message whose significance should not be overlooked by the Castros in Cuba or the Chavistas of Venezuela.

The Daily Signal depends on the support of readers like you. Donate now

Trending

Join The Discussion

I hate to be the “bearer of bad news”, but at this point Qadhafi is still in Libya. He may be gone by the time
this is read, but for now, he’s still their. Yesterday afternoon the main stream media reported one of Qadhafi’s sons was in the hands of the rebels. Last night that was proven not to be the facts. The point is the main stream media is so desprate to find any reason to give Obama a bump in his approval ratings, they will, as they have so often done in the past, actually invent the news to protect Obama and allow him to take credit for “leading from behind”. The media is trying their best to reinvent the bin Laden operation
all over again, that gave Obama a short lived bump in the polls.

Birds of a feather flock together! It only takes one bird, however, to lead the entire flock on the wrong migratory route ultimately ending in their demise. Anybody else notice a pattern? Similarities? Anyone?

Don’t have time to read the Washington Post or New York Times? Then get The Morning Bell, an early morning edition of the day’s most important political news, conservative commentary and original reporting from a team committed to following the truth no matter where it leads.

Email address

Ever feel like the only difference between the New York Times and Washington Post is the name? We do. Try the Morning Bell and get the day’s most important news and commentary from a team committed to the truth in formats that respect your time…and your intelligence.